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Chapter 15: Government at Work: The Bureaucracy Section 1

Chapter 15: Government at Work: The Bureaucracy Section 1. Objectives. Define a bureaucracy. Identify the major elements of the federal bureaucracy. Explain how groups within the federal bureaucracy are named. Describe the difference between a staff agency and a line agency. Key Terms.

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Chapter 15: Government at Work: The Bureaucracy Section 1

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  1. Chapter 15: Government at Work: The BureaucracySection 1

  2. Objectives Define a bureaucracy. Identify the major elements of the federal bureaucracy. Explain how groups within the federal bureaucracy are named. Describe the difference between a staff agency and a line agency.

  3. Key Terms bureaucracy: a large, complex administrative structure that handles the everyday business of an organization bureaucrat: a person who works for a bureaucracy administration: the collective name given to the many administrators and agencies within the government

  4. Key Terms, cont. staff agency: a support unit that aids the chief executive and the administrators of the various line agencies by offering advice and management assistance line agency: a government agency that carries out specific tasks in pursuit of goals set by Congress and the President

  5. Introduction • What is the structure and purpose of the federal bureaucracy? • Bureaucracies exist to coordinate the work of people in large organizations. • The goal of a bureaucracy is to allow people to perform large-scale and/or complex work as efficiently as possible. • For example, the federal bureaucracy employs millions of people to do work as varied as defending the nation, delivering mail, and regulating business.

  6. Bureaucracies • A bureaucracy has three key features: • Hierarchicalauthority: There is a chain of command that runs from a few people at the top down to many workers at the bottom. • Job specialization: Each worker in the organization has specific duties and responsibilities. • Formalized rules: Work is guided by a large number of written rules and regulations available to all employees.

  7. Benefits of a Bureaucracy • Checkpoint: What are the benefits of a bureaucratic structure? • Having a hierarchy means that major decisions require the approval of high-ranking organization members, which helps keep them aware of what is going on.

  8. Benefits, cont. • Job specialization allows each employee to become skilled at a certain task and perform it with greater efficiency. • Formalized rules help bureaucrats deal with issues in an objective manner and create a set of reliable standards for the organization that all employees can learn and follow.

  9. Criticisms of Bureaucracies • People often criticize bureaucracies for having too many employees and procedures. • How does this cartoon illustrate this point?

  10. The Federal Bureaucracy • The federal bureaucracy consists of all the agencies, people, and procedures through which the federal government makes and carries out public policy. • Most of the federal bureaucracy is part of the executive branch, but the judicial and legislative branches have bureaucracies as well. • Bureaucrats are appointed, not elected, officers of the federal government.

  11. Executive Departments • The Constitution refers to the presence of executive departments within the executive branch. • The Constitution does not specify the number, powers, or organization of these executive departments. • The structure of the federal bureaucracy has developed over time, to meet the needs of policy makers for an administration that can carry out their decisions.

  12. The Executive Branch • Checkpoint: What three main groups make up the executive branch? • The Executive Office of the President • The 15 Cabinet-level departments • A large number of independent agencies

  13. The Executive Branch, cont. • The executive branch of the Federal Government is composed of a large number of agencies, all of them created by acts of Congress to execute the laws of the United States. • Nearly 80 percent of all of the men and women who work for these agencies in fact work some place other than Washington, D.C. • Why do you think the executive branch makes up the majority of the federal bureaucracy?

  14. The Executive Branch, cont. • The Executive Office of the President is an umbrella agency composed of several sub-agencies staffed by the President’s closest advisors and assistants. • Often called the Cabinet departments, the executive departments and their subunits carry out much of the work of the Federal Government. • The independent agencies are not attached to any of the Cabinet departments and exercise a wide range of responsibilities in the carrying out of government business as well as serving the public.

  15. Naming Executive Units • The units of the executive branch can have many different names. • The most common names are agency, administration, commission, corporation, authority, bureau, service, office, branch, and division.

  16. Assigning Names • There are few clear guidelines on how to assign these names. • The titles agency or administration often refer to major units. • Commission refers to units that regulate business. • Corporation or authority refer to units that have business functions. • Many federal agencies are referred to by their initials, such as the EPA, FBI, or NASA

  17. Line and Staff Agencies • Congress and the President give the various line agencies goals to meet. • The staff agencies then help the line agencies meet these goals. • Staff agencies also assist the President.

  18. Line and Staff Agencies, cont. • For example, the Executive Office of the President includes several staff agencies that advise the president but do not administer public programs or directly enforce policy. • The Environmental Protection Agency is a line agency responsible for enforcing the nation’s environmental and pollution laws on a daily basis.

  19. Review • Now that you have learned about the structure and purpose of the federal bureaucracy, go back and answer the Chapter Essential Question. • Is the bureaucracy essential to good government?

  20. Chapter 15: Government at Work: The BureaucracySection 2

  21. Objectives Describe the Executive Office of the President. Explain the duties of The White House, the National Security Council, and the Office of Management and Budget. Identify the other agencies that make up the Executive Office of the President.

  22. Key Terms • Executive Office of the President: a complex organization of several separate agencies staffed by some 900 of the President’s closest advisors and assistants • federal budget: a very detailed estimate of receipts and expenditures during the next fiscal year

  23. Key Terms, cont. • fiscal year: the 12-month period used by government and business for record-keeping, budgeting, and other financial management purposes • domestic affairs: all matters of a nation that are not connected to the area of foreign affairs

  24. Introduction • What agencies and advisors are part of the Executive Office of the President and what are their functions? • The Executive Office of the President (EOP) includes: • The White House • The National Security Council • The Office of Management and Budget • Many other executive units • The EOP advises and informs the President on issues such as foreign policy, national security, and the economy.

  25. EOP Background • All of the agencies and employees in the executive branch are legally subordinate to the President and exist to help the President wield executive power. • The EOP works closely with the President. • The EOP was formed in 1939. Today it has some 900 advisors and assistants. • The EOP is one example of how much the modern executive branch has grown since the founding of our nation.

  26. The White House Office • Checkpoint: What is the role of the White House staff? • The EOP is centered on The White House, home to much of the President’s key personal and political staff. • This staff includes individuals such as the chief of staff, the counselor to the President, and the press secretary. • A large number of advisors and assistants in The White House provide the President with information on a range of topics, including the economy, congressional relations, political affairs, national defense, and public relations.

  27. The West Wing • The White House includes two office buildings and the President’s residence. • The East and West wings extend from the residence. • The President’s closest advisors are located in the West Wing near the Oval Office. • Why is it important that these advisors be so close to the President’s office?

  28. National Security Council • The NSC is a staff agency that advises the President on all domestic, foreign, and military matters that relate to national security. • It also gives direction to U.S. intelligence agencies.

  29. NSC Members • The President chairs the NSC, whose members also include the Vice President and the secretaries of state, treasury, and defense. • The Director of National Intelligence and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff also attend NSC meetings.

  30. NSC Staff • The small staff of experts in foreign and military policy employed by the NSC work under the President’s assistant for national security affairs, who is often called the national security advisor. • During the 1980s, the NSC went beyond its staff agency role to carry out covert operations, which led to the Iran-Contra scandal.

  31. The OMB • The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is the largest unit in the Executive Office of the President. It prepares the federal budget submitted by the President to Congress each year. • The federal government’s fiscal year runs from October 1 to September 30. • Each federal agency provides the OMB with estimates of its spending needs, which the OMB reviews and adjusts to fit the President’s overall policy and budget plans.

  32. The Federal Budget • Preparing an official budget can take more than a year. The result is a carefully crafted plan for how the federal government should operate.

  33. The Federal Budget, cont. • The OMB must consider a variety of factors before it creates the President’s final budget proposal. These factors include: • What the government can spend • What Americans want • What the President wants

  34. Other OMB Duties • The OMB also monitors the work of all agencies in the executive branch and works to ensure that their policies agree with those of the President. • In addition, the OMB helps the President prepare executive orders and veto messages.

  35. The EOP and the Senate • Checkpoint: What role does the Senate play in staffing the EOP? • Like the OMB, other EOP Agencies are run by officials appointed by the President. The Senate must approve some of these appointments.

  36. EOP Agencies • The Office of National Drug Control Policy was established in 1988 to prepare the nation’s drug control strategy and coordinate the federal agencies that take part in the war on drugs. • The three-member Council of Economic Advisers advises and informs the President on economic policy and helps prepare the annual Economic Report to Congress, submitted in January or February each year.

  37. EOP Agencies, cont. • Other agencies in the EOP advise the President on topics such as science and technology, the environment, foreign trade, and public policy. They include: • The Office of Science and Technology Policy • The Council on Environmental Quality • The Office of United States Trade Representatives • The Office of Policy Developmen. • The Office of the Vice President, which has grown in recent years, houses the Vice President’s advisors and staff.

  38. Review • Now that you have learned about the agencies and advisors that are a part of the EOP and their function, go back and answer the Chapter Essential Question. • Is the bureaucracy essential to good government?

  39. Chapter 15: Government at Work: The BureaucracySection 3

  40. Objectives Describe the origin and work of the executive departments. Explain how the members of the Cabinet are chosen. Identify the role of the Cabinet in the President’s decisions.

  41. Key Terms • executive department: one of 15 major departments in the executive branch, each of which specializes in a specific area of public policy; together they make up the Cabinet • civilian: nonmilitary • secretary: the title given to the heads of the executive departments • attorney general: the title of the head of the Department of Justice

  42. Introduction • What is the Cabinet and what does it do? • The Cabinet is an informal advisory body made up of the heads of the 15 executive departments. • It also includes other key advisors to the President. • Individually, Cabinet members run their departments and carry out presidential policies. • As a group, they advise the President.

  43. Executive Departments • The 15 executive departments are also called the Cabinet departments. • The First Congress created the Departments of State, Treasury, and War in 1789. • Over time, departments have been added, abolished, divided and combined to meet the changing needs of the country.

  44. Department Secretaries • Each department is headed by a secretary appointed by the President. • The Department of Justice (DoJ) is headed by the attorney general. • The department heads ensure that their departments carry out presidential policy. • They also represent the interests of their departments when dealing with the White House, Congress, other departments, and the public. • Each department head has many assistants and aides to help with issues such as public relations, planning, and budgeting.

  45. Executive Departments • The executive departments employ nearly two-thirds of the civilian federal workforce. • Roughly 80 percent of these employees are career civil servants, not appointees. • Nearly 90 percent of federal civilian employees work outside Washington, D.C. • Each department is divided into smaller subunits with specific line or staff duties. • For example, the Criminal Division of the DoJ is further divided into sections dealing with counterterrorism and narcotics.

  46. Executive Departments, cont. • The executive departments vary widely in visibility, size, and importance. • The Department of State is the oldest and most prestigious, but among the smallest. • The Department of Defense is the largest, with more than 2 million civilian and military employees. • The Department of Health and Human Services has the largest budget, accounting for about a fourth of all federal spending.

  47. Executive Departments, cont. • Each of the now 15 executive departments was created by Congress. • Their respective areas of responsibility generally reflect the conditions of the period and the major issues facing the nation when each of them was established. • What new department(s) do you think might be created in the 21st century?

  48. The Cabinet • The Cabinet is a vital but informal group that advises the President. • Neither Congress nor the Constitution created the Cabinet. • George Washington began the custom of meeting regularly with the heads of the executive departments.

  49. Cabinet Members • Checkpoint: What officials are members of the Cabinet? • The Cabinet includes the heads of the 15 executive departments. • Today, it also includes: • The Vice President • The President’s chief domestic policy adviser • The White House Chief of Staff • The director of the OMB • Other officials as chosen by the President, often from within the ranks of the Executive Office of the President

  50. Cabinet Members, cont. • The President appoints the head of each of the 15 executive departments. • Each appointee must be confirmed by the Senate. The Senate rarely rejects an appointee.

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